A glimpse into the creative heart of today’s most talented sewing & quilting artists.
Issue 13
Š2015 SCHMETZneedles.com
All rights reserved.
In this Issue: Sewing Star:
Amy Barickman Page 3
Road Trip:
One of a Kind Page 10
Needle Points:
Do SCHMETZ Needles . . . Page 14
Cover:
Amy Barickman www.IndygoJunction.com Crossroads Denim Project Showcase from Dimensional Denim Amy wears Crossroad Trench #IJ976 Pics Provided by Amy
Interview by:
Rita Farro
Wings of the City, by Jorge Marín, a Mexican artist
Above is my favorite pic of 2014. Yes, that’s me, but more than the pic, I like experiencing the emotions of freedom, comfort, positive energy and soaring inspiration just like when I first laid eyes on this gentle giant sculpture. Geez, I love taking pics of all my sewing and quilting friends – and have a zillion, but only a handful of pics of myself. In the beautiful green Discovery Park in front of the George R. Brown Convention Center in Houston, TX where International Quilt Market convenes every October, I was elated to find this beautiful set of sculptured wings. Luckily, a couple Italian tourists also walked by in awe of this winged sculpture. None of use spoke each other’s language, but we understood the desire to take pics of each other. That got me thinking that our sewing and quilting also communicate comfort, determination and a sense of play while doing and sharing our talents. Amy Barickman is certainly one savvy businesswoman sharing so many talents that started with the founding of Indygo Junction. I think you too will marvel at how Amy has brought to life her sewing soul sister, Mary Brooks Picken. Just check out your local shop for her patterns and most recent book The Magic Pattern. Also in this issue, an excerpt from my personal journal along with pics from my recent adventure to the awesome One-Of-A-Kind Show in Chicago. Sew SCHMETZ & Grabbit Too!
www.Ritassewfun.blogspot.com
What Inspires YOU to Sew? There’s an App for That!
Rhonda Pierce Marketing Director & Publisher SCHMETZneedles.com
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Issue 13
Sewing Star
Issue 13
Sewing Star Amy Barickman Vintage Made Modern
Amy Learning to Sew
Amy with Mom, Donna Martin
Amy with Chloe
Amy Barickman’s motto is “Vintage Made Modern.” Her company, Indygo Junction, has published well over 1200 patterns and is considered one of the most prolific and successful independent pattern companies in America. Here at Inspired to SEW — we are always asking the same question: What is Amy’s inspiration? In the 1980’s Amy Barickman’s mother, Donna Martin, started a business in their home in Des Moines, Iowa teaching people how to make teddy bears. It eventually grew into a brick and mortar store that not only catered to crafters and sewers, but also carried clothing, jewelry and gifts. Amy believes that growing up around her mother’s business sparked her own creative and entrepreneurial spirit.
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Influenced by her mother’s connections to the local creative community, right after college Amy started Indygo Junction. She wanted to work with artists and designers, and the pattern business seemed logical. Amy is also a popular teacher and a successful fabric designer. In 2013, she debuted a new fabric line with James Thompson Co., Crossroads Denim, as well as a coordinating line of patterns. A new cotton line will be launching at the 2015 Spring Quilt Market with RJR Fabrics along with a series of patterns to compliment the collection. Like most entrepreneurs, Amy lives her business day and night. Collecting vintage sewing and dressmaking content has long been Amy’s passion. Her vast vintage collection inspired her to create another website, The Vintage Workshop
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Amy and Emma
Amy’s Inspiration
( www.freevintagegraphics.com ), which specializes in clip art for paper crafts, scrap-booking, wearable art, needle arts and sewing. Whether she is teaching, traveling, or working in her studio, Amy constantly finds inspiration for patterns and fabric, or new design concepts. She takes notes and nowadays her iPhone is an indispensable tool. She is an avid photographer and has built a frequently used library of nature images. Fashion is a major influence on her work and she looks to magazines and blogs to keep up with current trends. Amy says, “My studio has natural light coming from windows on three sides. I have my vintage collection on display, including an entire wall of vintage sewing and dressmaking content — so I am surrounded by inspiration. Oh, and Chloe, my cat, is a constant fixture as well — she makes a great mascot!”
Amy’s life and business is centered in Prairie Village, Kansas, a suburb of Kansas City, Missouri. But her parents grew up in Michigan and return to their family home on the Torch River each summer to vacation. This is Amy’s “happy place.” She loves going there in the summers with her husband, Bob, and their two children, Jack, 16 and Emma, 12. Amy says, “We enjoy wonderful family time there. I am reinvigorated by nature’s beauty and the wonderful escape from traditional work days. I love Northern Michigan’s art fairs, antiquing, and small town shopping opportunities.” In 2008, Amy discovered Mary Brooks Picken, and it’s fair to say that inspiration has turned into obsession. When Amy starts talking about Mary, she lights up with a burning enthusiasm and energy.
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Mary Brooks Picken
Mary Brooks Picken was born in Kansas in 1886. Her sewing and design talent was apparent at a young age and she decided to make sewing and teaching her profession. She eventually attended and graduated from seven schools of dressmaking in Kansas City, Boston, and New York. She married in 1906 and had a traditional home life but her husband died in 1911. Several years later, Mary was an instructor at the American College of Dressmaking in Kansas City when she was recruited by the International Correspondence Schools. In 1916, she founded The Woman’s Institute of Domestic Arts and Sciences in Scranton, Pennsylvania. The school combined correspondence courses with classroom instruction in dressmaking, millinery, cooking, fashion design, beauty, and homemaking. It attracted students from around the world as enrollment climbed to almost 300,000 women, making it the largest school in history devoted solely to the education of women.
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Mary Brooks Picken was a pioneering businesswoman who was considered the international authority on dressmaking. She authored the popular textbook The One Hour Dress and How to Make It. It was a bestseller and brought national attention to Mary and the Institute. She went on to write nearly 100 books on sewing, dressmaking, needle arts, and fashion. She taught at Columbia University and was the first woman to be named a trustee of the Fashion Institute of Technology. Her accomplishments introduced her into the most prominent circles of her day and made her a celebrity in her own right. Amy said, “I connect with Mary Brooks Picken as a teacher, an author and an entrepreneur. Like her, my business pursuits promote the domestic arts, fashion and empowerment of women. Through Indygo Junction, I have published hundreds of sewing patterns and dozens of books filled with handmade
Issue 13
Vintage Inspirations
style for the creative spirit. I even discovered that Mary published patterns with McCall’s, who prints the tissue for Indygo Junction patterns.” The more she learned about Mary, the more Amy identified with her achievements and passions. “As I was doing research about Mary and the Institute, I discovered an entire body of work. She is my sewing soul sister. Mary’s publications, lesson plans, newsletters, and columns were beautifully illustrated and wonderfully written. I realized that much of the information and wisdom in the pages was still relevant for women today and provided a blueprint for living a simple, fulfilling life.” Determined to share Mary’s teachings with today’s women, Amy published her award-winning book, Amy Barickman’s Vintage Notions: An Inspirational Guide to Needlework,
Cooking, Sewing, Fashion & Fun, in September of 2010. Packed with inspirational essays, projects and patterns, recipes and more, Vintage Notions resurrects the timeless words of Mary and other instructors from the Woman’s Institute. Amy added her own Modern Notions reflections on Mary’s Vintage Notions essays. One of Mary’s popular columns’ was The Magic Page, with instructions for garments and accessories creating patterns from diagrams. Mary’s philosophy of fashion was to express your individual style, and she encouraged that by offering different options for her patterns. Amy expanded this idea into the concept of using a basic pattern with six variations of the design to create multiple unique projects, thus The Magic Pattern Book, published in August of 2014. The book is a great value with 36 patterns for an entire wardrobe! It also
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Amy’s Magic Fashion Show
features another popular trend that parallels Mary’s teachings, up-cycling! From men’s dress shirts to cashmere sweaters a recycled option for each pattern offers a “thrifty” option! The Magic Fashion Show, featuring designs from The Magic Pattern Book, is currently traveling with the Original Sewing and Quilt Expo. Amy will travel to a few of the shows herself to emcee the Fashion Show. In 2015, she will teach at several OSQE shows, as well as The Sewing & Stitchery Expo in Puyallup, Washington. The website www.AmyBarickman.com was created to support Amy’s move into writing and book publishing. It has become a resource for vintage sewing images, eBooks, patterns, etc. Amy is on a mission to share the best sewing related content from The Woman’s Institute as well as lessons and wisdom from Mary Brooks Picken.
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Amy Barickman’s Vintage Notions is a stunning book, jam packed with beautiful images and inspirational content. It is organized by the months of the year. The January Thimbleful of Happiness is a good way for us to kick off 2015. Mary’s words are as relevant today as they were a hundred years ago . . . . Happiness needs no accessories For it is in itself omnipotent It takes hold in the heart, Builds its nest, and brings forth Its own birds to sing for you. — Mary Brooks Picken www.IndygoJunction.com www.AmyBarickman.com www.freevintagegraphics.com
— written by Rita Farro Issue 13
Vintage Notions excerpt blends Picken’s writing with Amy’s vintage fabric & embroidery collections.
“Isn’t it strange that Princes and Kings And clowns that caper in sawdust rings, And just plain folk like you and me, Are builders for Eternity? To each is given a bag of tools, A shapeless mass and a book of rules; And each must make ere life is flown, A stumbling block or a stepping stone?” heard a young woman say the other day, “Oh, I give up. What’s the use of my trying to be anybody or trying to have nice things? My ambitions only make me restless and miserable.” But we all know that ambitions once entertained are hard to lose. The farther you come from attaining them, the more miserable you will be. Hence the need of continual effort. To the woman who says, “What’s the use?” one might say: “What’s the use of working, of washing the dishes, of getting up in the mornings, of liking air and sunshine and pretty things?” There isn’t any real use, perhaps, in it all, but it is oh so satisfying, to go into a kitchen to cook dinner where everything is happily clean and in place. What a satisfying, luxurious feeling it is to crawl into a well-made cozy bed. What a delight it is to don fresh, clean clothing. What a self-respecting feeling one has when one puts on a well-made dress that is appropriate and becoming. All these things take time and effort, but they pay double in sheer pleasure. And we should use our energies to make happiness come for every effort, pleasure for every thought that we give to family, home, or clothing, and thus make of all our responsibilities stepping stones to success, via happiness. For surely, when we are happy, we are successful, at least in that little domain where we are queen. No matter what our environment, no matter what our circumstances — a singing tea kettle, a cozy fire, some one to care for, some one to care, a conscience that does not disturb — all these help in our walk up the steps to divine contentment. For some of us it may seem a long journey, but trying makes it interesting. And we have the satisfaction all the way of having done our best . . . . -- Mary Brooks Picken
Issue 13
Road Trip
Scavenger Couture
Miriam Carter/Feltmaker & Milliner
Pencil Lady
Peapack Mitten Company
Bud Scheffel/Earthsaver Wind Sculpture
Stafford Dolls
Marylou Ozbolt-Storer
One of a Kind Show and Sale December 2014, Chicago — Have I been living under a rock? This show was AMAZING and right here in my Chicago stomping grounds. Here’s an excerpt from my personal journal: First, Chicago traffic is a nightmare equaled by finding a Chicago parking spot. I spent no less than 25 minutes circling inside a dark six story parking lot looking for a spot. Discouraged, I decided to exit and low and behold, just two spots from the exit I found a prime time parking spot. Parking luck delayed!
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I walked only two blocks to the Chicago Merchandise Mart and noticed ladies usually in pairs and threesomes, that had that certain look. You know that look of “finding a shopping paradise.” When entering the massive Mart I was floored at the waiting line for the elevator, at least three dozen people waiting to get up to the 7th floor to the show. Although still frazzled from driving & parking, I remained calm thinking that this massive 4.2 million sq ft building has to have more than one elevator and looked further down the long bustling corridor and got sight of another designated show elevator that had only three people waiting.
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H(om)e by Heather Hambrecht
Wonderkids and Sam and Coop
Sarmite Wearable Art
Yan’s Embroidery Art
Once on the show floor a security host guided us to directories and a free paper shopping bag. Yes, free, of course their goal is for every attendee to load up the bag with goodies, because I was SURROUNDED by creative awesomeness!!! OMG, the creative vibe and buying frenzy was palpable. I walked in awe and that feeling of wonderment never left. My gosh, a whole new beautiful world of creative arts and awesomeness just unfolded! With over 600 artistic booths, where the heck do I start? Even deciphering the map was a challenge just because I couldn’t stop looking around. Fiber arts, soft goods, paintings, woodworking, sculptures, dolls, food, jewelry,
Featured Fine Artists
serious fashion with a price tag to match. Frankly, I looked at only one price tag on an lovely hand woven one-of-a-kind skirt for $899. OMG! It was beautiful and so soft. Each booth of remarkable wonders topped the neighboring booth. Colors, textures, patterns . . . I was in sensory overload after only one hour. I wanted to stop for a bite to eat, but all the vendors had huge lines, even the beer garden, so I just kept going. I found the Etsy and Fashion District areas and just marveled. The aisles were unbelievably crowded. Everyone was looking, looking, looking. I have never seen so many beautiful hats, the
Issue 13
B. Felt/Barbara Poole
Chuck Wimmer
Squasht Boutique
Lenae May
Stafford Dolls
Laura Wright/LOinLondon
type of hats I would wear if still living in the city. Women were trying on gorgeous coats, capes, wraps . . . even t-shirt dresses. Curiously, I did not see even one quilt. I feel I have been living under a rock. This show was AMAZING!!! I have to kick up my wardrobe – it’s looking tired, and this show was just the inspiration. Now for the ugly truth. The aisles were very narrow as attendees funneled shoulder to shoulder from one end to the other. The air was warm from close bodies and the ceiling was low, so no airflow. If someone was claustrophobic, this would not be a good place.
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Sam and Coop
Sprouted Designs
Will I attend again? Absolutely! My creative spirit has already made note of next year’s date, December 6 – 9, 2015. If you plan to attend, let me know and we’ll meet up to compare notes. I’ll be dressed with a kick in my step . . . and next time, I’ll take the train into Chicago, then walk or cab over to the Mart.
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The Fashion District
MIdwest Crochet
Squasht Boutique
Headmistress
Artist in A Box: DeMarcus Purham
Lillie & Cohoe
December 3-6, 2015 www.oneofakindshowchicago.com
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Needle P oints with Rhonda
Do SCHMETZ Needles Work With My Machine? SCHMETZ works with all these sewing machine brands! SCHMETZ engineers work with sewing machine manufacturers around the world to ensure that the SCHMETZ needle performs properly in your home sewing, embroidery and quilting machines. Most home machines use needle system 130/705 H, so check your machine’s owner’s manual or ask your machine dealer. Sew SCHMETZ!
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All rights reserved.
Š2015 SCHMETZneedles.com
Issue 13